Candace Fujikane is a scholar and activist whose work brings together Indigenous epistemologies, climate justice, and decolonial cartographies. Author of Mapping Abundance for a Planetary Future, she argues that mapping abundance is all the more important in the face of climate change. Rather than seeing climate change as apocalyptic, we can see that changes on the earth are leading to the demise of capitalist economies of scarcity, making way for land-based economies of renewed abundance. We can expose the exhausted colonial mappings that frame lands as “wastelands,” proposing instead Kanaka Maoli ways of knowing that reveal abundance, resilience, and relationality. As the world burns with anthropogenic fires, Kānaka Maoli have called the 2023 fires in Lahaina, Maui a “reset”: a chance to rebuild by mapping abundance. Her research reimagines cartography as a practice of ecological care, grounded in ancestral knowledge and planetary futures